Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / May 24, 1912, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE DELINEATOR EvUtYBODTC Macazini ui Amentum am a local RwnMm. Yoa eu earn salary nr month. Wnt to-cUy lot Ik SaWrks hafans, Ca, MhriA . M 0 KODAKS DEVELOPING riuAiinu Eastman snd ansco Alms, walled pose paid. Mall orders gian prompt sllentlon An slie mil lllm developed for luuenle PAltHON OPTICAL CO. 44 lUug street, Charleston, S. 0 -11 y. CL.-i. applied to mosqoltoorothei JHIll-HIO-OKeeiS Insect biles glTeslnitant re Hot 1 a beentlfnl ibon eellnloldcovered pencil carried IB Test pocket or pan. Bend 10c or est druggists. aU--UMB.U.tMCksnkH.,lTri A true friend li a person who liBteni to your troubles. That Irritable, nervous condition due to $ bad liver oall fur it natural antidote Garfield Tea. Probably there Is nothing more ex pensive than the things we get (01 nothing. For HEADACHE Hicks' CAIM'DINl Whether from Colds, Heat, Btomach 01 Merroua Troubles, Capudlne will rellere you It's liquid pleasant to take acta Immedi ately. Try It. loo., Kc., aud 60 cents at drug stores. Some people lead such placid Uvea that nothing ever seems to happen to them, not even the unexpected. To be sweet and clean, every worn an should use Paxttne In sponge bath lng. It eradicates perspiration and all other body odors. At druRKlstg 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt ol prloe by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boa ton, Mass. The Plain Truth. "Has that man a mania (or oscu lation?" "No, he's a plain kissing bug." You may have noticed that about the time a shoe begins to feel com fortable it looks like a candidate for the refuse wagon. His Advantage. "A beauty doctor has one advantage over other men In something of his line." "What Is that?" "He can lawfully conduct a skin game." Kind of Things to Buy. "I'm thinking of going on a tour on the Rhine this summer, and I should like your advice about the best things to buy there. You've been there, haven't you?" "Yes, but it's a long time ago. I shall have to refresh my memory. Walter, bring the wine card." Fliegende Blaettor. Her Natural Protector. "0 Clara, we had a dreadful scare this morning, a burglar scare!" said Mrs. Fink. "There was a frightful noise about two o'clock, and I got up. 1 turned on the light and looked down, to see a man's legs sticking out from under the bed." "Mercy, how dreadful! The burg lar's?" "No, my dear, my husband's. He had heard the noise, too." Youth's Companion. His Veracity. Jim Slocum of Montgomery county, avers the Kansas City Journal, was called as a witness to impeach the tes timony of a man in that county. Jim was asked if he was acquainted with the reputation of the witness for truth and veracity. Jim said that he guessed maybe he was. "Is it good or bad?" "Well," -Bali Jim, "I don't want to do the man no injustice, but I will say that If his neighbors were to see him looking as if be was dead they would want some corroboratin' evi dence before they would be willing to bury -him." Jewels In a Flower-Bed. The recovery of a quantity of stolen Jewelry from a flower-bed was de scribed at Kingston-on-Thames police court the other day, when a general servant was charged with theft from her mistress, a resident of Ivydene, Southborough-road, Surblton, London. The lady had missed a pearl pin and a pearl and diamond ring. Thinking she might have lost the Jewels In the street, she Issued printed notices of fering a reward for their recovery. When she lost a number of other things she placed the matter In the hands of the police. The detective said that from what the prisoner d him he searched the garden, and in one of the flower-beds found some of the Jewelry. The ' rest he found in the prisoner's bedroom. When the Appetite Lags A bowl of Post Toasties with cream hits the right spot "Toasties" are thin bits of corn; fuDy cooked, then toasted to a crisp, golden-brown.'- , This food makes a fine change t' for spring appe tites. ' . Sold bj Grocers, and ready to serve from pack age instantly with cream and sugar. ' ;-;.:-..::: "Th Memory Lingers" Masefcy Pseteai Cereal Company, Lai era Pood Factories Battle Creek, slick. NOTES sra HEADOWBROOK r-r- t w. -r.'wr rAKrl Keep a spray calendar. . Cut out the dead branches. Chickens relish fresh lettuce. Select your breed and stick to It. If you plant pear trees in rich soil you Invite blight. It Is work worth while to scald the calf's feed pall every day. A peach tree will stand a heavier heading back than an apple tree. Do not allow the stock to run In the orchard during the winter months. Eggs may differ materially In color, and yet not differ much in nutriment. Scatter the manure as you haul it, don't put Into little piles all over the land. Keep the feed troughs clean. It Is a wasteful practice to mix manure with grain. Letting the calf suck the cow the first day or two lessens the danger of milk fever. If sows are expected to produce a fall litter, the spring litter should be weaned when about 10 weeks old. Five or six of the twelve or thirteen species of beetles attacking stored grains are found usually in farmers' bins. If you are still so far behind the age as to be dairying with no separa tor, get one now, if you sell a cow to do it. An occasional colt or young horse to sell, even when one is not making a business of raising horses, is a help to any farmer. The litter carrier will do much to keep the barn clean, because it en courages the boys and men to do their work beter. The training of a colt cannot be too thorough. A half-broken horse Is not broken at all, and Is always a dangerous animal. The objection to trap nests comes from the fact that it is necessary to visit them several times dally in order to release the hens. Calves should have plenty of water as early as they want to drink It, but it Is best not to let them have It right after their milk feed. Where from four to eight cows are milked the churn should hold from six to ten gallons. Better a little large than too small. Currant bushes must also be watch ed carefully, and be thoroughly spray ed at least twice or you will find more green worms on your bushes than fruit. A vessel wfiich would hold 1,000 pounds of water would hold 1,032 pounds of whole milk, 1.038 pounds of sklmmllk, or 1,000 pounds of good cream. When you see the little ghost-like winged creatures rising like tiny clouds from your rose bushes, be sure It Is the aphis. Get after them with the spray. Young climbing roses ought to be cut back to a strong eye, and the side shoots pruned as grapevines are pruned that Is, a couple of eyes from the stem. When cream foams In the churn and butter will not come, put In a handful or two of salt and a little water, slight ly warmed. This usually remedies the trouble. Get some variety in the poultry ra tion. If the chickens are not eating heartily they may need a little change In their food to put their appetites back In tone. Not a few of our dairy folks are go ing to raise a crop of cowpeaa as hay feed for cows this year. Cowpeas hay is next to alfalfa aad clover In milk making qualities. Eggs to be preserved should be per fectly fresh and be placed in the so lution the same day as laid to obtain the best results, although eggs several days old will keep very well. Washed eggs should sot be. used . For old people who do not want to wait for large fruit, dwarf trees' will trove satisfactory, aa they begin to bear the second or third year. Dwarf pear and apple trees In the garden are ornamental aa well as useful. One advantage In dwarfs ts that many trees can be set in small apace. The trees bear early and the fruit la of good quality. ; The capital necessary to start flock of pure bred birds need not be large; in fact, it may be the minimum amount needed in any branch of live stock. A bouse and some blooded stock, perhaps an i Incubator and brooder, are all that are necessary to get off on the right foot The incu bator and brooder may be omitted from the list until the second or third year when the flock will have paid for theee In advance. Oct a separator. Old ewes are unprofitable. Plant cowpeaa in the orchard. The value of a cow ts hard to guess. Don't forget to brace the end post of any fence or trellis. Pigs that show signs of thumps should be forced to take exercise. A little vaseline rubbed Into cuts or chapped teats will soon heal them up. Commercial fertilizer, when prop erly used, will increase the yield of crops. The silo is a time saver when it comes to feeding a large number of animals. The wheel hoe will save many backache and do the work of three hand hoes. Fruit trees should never be planted on the lawn, as they cannot be profit ably worked. If more farmers were tied down by dairies, fewer of them would be tied down by debts. Three-pail feeds a day for the young calf are none too many. That Is more like Nature's way. Wheat bran has just the elements in it that sheep and lambs need to make good growth. About 23 pounds of average milk should furnish enough oream to make a pound of butter. Powdered charcoal in the feed is good for bowel trouble and plenty of grit has the same effect The best method of dehorning Is to rub a little caustic potash on the calf's little knobs when a few days old. After chicks are a week old whole Kaffir makes about as good a single grain as can be fed to make weight Wood ashes are valuable to spread around fruit trees for small fruits and vegetables; they should not be wasted. It is generally conceded that the best time to sell chickens is from the first of January to the first of Novem ber. No profit in keeping old ewes that have lost their teeth. Better fatten them the best you can and get rid of them quickly. The garden can and should be made the most productive and most profit able plot of ground on the farm. It should not be overlooked. The sheep manure as a fertilizer has no equal, and no manure spreader has ever been invented that is as sat isfactory as the sheep itself. The check rein has no place on the harness of a man who cares for his horses, and desires for them com fort and freedom when at work. If vnur horse Is a mule, remem ber to sneak klndlv to him whenever you fasten the traces. The same rule applies when he is only a "boss." Corn silage and alfalfa make an ex cellent ration for dairy cows, and good yields of milk have been re ported where nothing else was fed. The old neglected orchard, with Its dead leaves and wormy apples, Is a blot on the face of the earth. Trim, spray, cultivate and get big returns. Whatever else may be said about ways of getting winter eggs, a few warm days at this time of year seem to solve the problem satisfactorily. Nothing is so salable In the stock line just now as a good dairy cow. The raising of purebred milk cows as an industry should receive more atten tion. The hand separator Is good in the ory, but the majority of farmers do not keep their cream aa they should, nor deliver It to the creamery often enough. The reason why so many of our beautiful plants and vines are de stroyed by bugs la because we are too lazy or unqualified to fight them U the time. It will pay to buy wheat bran to mix with the barley or com meal for feeding cowa. ' Bran and good barley meal, half and half, makes good meal for milk. Complete fertilizer ts one which con tains the three essential fertilizer con stituents, 1. e., nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash. One reason why it Is well to let the new calf run with the mother a day of two is because U is better able to take the swelling from the udder thn the hand milker Is., Burn the diseased branches so that the other trees will not be contaml ated. It will also be advisable to open the heads of peach trees, remove the surplus branches and take of the water sprouts, i k r Do not fear that the poultry busi ness will be overcrowded. While there are many people' who will take up the work In order to have fresh eggs and poultry for their own tables, this will not affect In any material way the open market nor reduce the price of eggs or dressed poultry. It la not advisable to put axle grease on fruit trees in order to prevent rab bits and .rodents from gnawing them. A little grease might not do any dam age, while too much might Injure the trees. Where the climate permits some green crop, such as oats, rye or wheat, win tempt the rabbits. The trees can also be protected by wrap ping them with old newspapers, thin boards or wire screens. s VSW OFNT. JSUSWOUX CALIFORNIA has some beautiful ceremonies and customs, well worthy of comment They are unique as well aa beautiful, and ii ia uttiug uini iu tula up land, so full of the spirit of progress, so alive to the artistic, so keenly aware of the value of beauty, these new ceremonies should have birth. Los Angeles has ber May Fiesta, a reincar nation of the Spanish feast day. The beach towns have their touching serv ice of Memorial day, when they com mit their garlands and flowers to the sea on an outgoing tide, thus com memorating the death of all sailors who died for their country. Pasa dena has her Rose tournament on New Year's day. One of the most beautiful of all ceremonies of Cali fornia's creating is that of the yearly sunrise Easter service on Mt Rubl doux. Nearly 2,000 people grouped about the Serra cross on the summit of the mountain this year, and 1 have never witnessed a more impressive scene, writes GuBsie Packard Du Bols in the Los Angeles Times. On that first Easter, we read that the disciples rose before dawn and hurried to the sacred place outside the city. So, in the hush before day break, the footfalls of pilgrims echoed on the streets of Riverside, the tread of many feet, tho sound of wheels. On the evening before, the Mission Inn had been well filled with those who bad come from all the neighbor ing towns to rest under its arches until daybreak. Great fires glowed on the hearths and roared up the chim neys; so they may have glowed and roared on the hearths of old abbeys, when Arthur and his knights went on quests. Olden Days Recalled. Sitting In the cloistered music room, with Its stalls like Westminster, Its many banners and ancient hangings, heraldry and awords, one might well be minded of the olden days of pil grimage, and alone In the cloistered walk among at&tued saints, the sound of the great organ coming faintly to the ears, the days of the Mission padres came again. It waa fitting to rest in such a place and await the dawn. At a quarter before four o'clock came the summons that the hour bad arrived for the assembling of the pil grims, and soon the court was full. It was a morning of fog, and out of the pale, gray opalescence the arches lifted indistinctly, half-hidden, half jlsclosed. The bells were still, their clappers mute. Voices were hushed. The great eyes of motor cars gleam ed strangely, many people passed on the dim streets, and all were still. The foot of the mountain was reach ed, the ascent began. Here a group, discarding the road, climbed up the mountainside over rocks and around treat boulders. Up and up, around and around went the crowd, disappear ing into the dimness. Beside ua were precipice ; with no bottom. Great rocks loomed before, beside us, and were gone. Roof by root, spire by pi re, grove and garden disappeared. We were out of the world, we bad climbed above it, we had reached the top, and the Mount of Transfiguration. Earth and earthly things were gone. There were a few momenta of 'quiet while we got out of our car and climb ed up to the foot of the cross, then from the enveloping, tremulous opal clouds came the clear, pure notes of the cornet To the unearthly beauty of that sound I listened until it ceaaed; then from the vast throng, as with one voice, came the Lord's Prayer, and responsive reading of the Scripture, and one voice took up the melody of a simple song, sweet and high. Two Thousand Sing. Again the sound of ainglng fell upon the ear, but now it was the many, the Vast assemblage in a familiar hymn. I caught my breath to hear that vol ume of songrlslng from 1,000 voices, it seemed to me like "the great mul titude" that we read about In Revela tion. "O never harp nor horn, nor aught we blow 'with breath or touch with hand was like that muslo as It earn." A single voice followed, clear, strong, vibrant In Henry Van Dyke's "God of tho Open Air." There waa no risible earth beneath; above was it beavenT It aeemed very near. Again the throng' sang. In the Cross of Christ I Glory-" ; The mists drove scross the Serra cross aa they sang; It disappeared and fcame again; the melody died away; wonderful, tremu lous color dreamed for a brief moment 1 n the east, and silence fell. - I picked a few flowers growing be side me. Slowly we came back to imrth and to the mountain's foot, and then back to the court and the cam panile, the open fires and the ban tered room. In all tho Easter eu atoms of many ands I can think of nothing more tnv j presslve than this. California has many beautiful customs upon which the world looks with pleasure. This, the annual event of Riverside, Is a contribution o: permanent value to the religious Institutions of the world. For me, for many. It will rest like a bene diction upon the year. CLEVER RUSE OF A WOMAN How Tenant In Non-Housekeeping Hotel Disposed of Her Cook ing Debris. Close observers looking in the right direction might have noticed a tall young woman, with pinkish hair, come out of the family hotel and walk rap idly toward the nearest car stop. On her way ahe dropped a good sized package that she had been car rylng under ber arm. It seemed strange that a women could lose so large package and not notice It, but she waa preoccupied with shopping lists or something and kept right on going. A man walking behind rushed to the rescue, however. He grabbed the package off the sidewalk and quick ened his pace to overtake her. But she was hurrying to catch ber car, which was approaching, and be didn't gain much. So he decided to call after her. f "I beg your pardon," she shouted. She didn't seem to hear. "I say, f beg your pardon, lady," be repeated, "but you dropped this pack aje." Still she didn't bear him, or,' at least didn't assume that his words were addressed at her. The man broke Into a ran. She waa climbing on the car, and there was no time to lose. The conductor signaled to the motorman, the car started Just as the panting rescuer of tbe package reached the corner.-. He was too late. "Well, she can do without her old package!" he growled to himself. He decided to open the thing up and see what was In it The chances were good that there was something valu able, he figured, for a fool of a woman like that would drop a valuable pack age even more readily than one of no consequence. He untied the cord, removed the pa per wrapping, and found the cold, still remains of a lunch three banana peelings, the bone out of a sirloin steak, and two or three dry crusts of bread. The woman had been doing light housekeeping In a non-housekeeping hotel suite and had neatly disposed of her cooking debris. Such Is Vanity. . Two women who had been attend ing a meeting of the Olio club at the Hotel Astor stepped into an elevator at the eighth floor to come down. One of them' immediately began looking in a mirror and arranging her hair. "Why, the vain thing!" said the other. .- :i "Vain nothing!" came from the first. "Just to demonstrate to you that I'm not, let me tell you something. I al ways stick my reception - Invitation cards In the sides of my mirror In my bedroom and, so Infrequently do I use the mirror, that I often forget about the dates of the social affairs." "Don't you mean," said the other, "that you're so Interested In your re flection In the mirror that you fail to notice tbe cards?" When they left the elevator It waa plain to be seen that their friend ship had received a alight setback. A Child's Queatlon. . Little Dorothy waa having her first experience of riding In a sleeper. She was In a lower berth with her mother and ahe asked so many questions thai she had to be told to keep quiet "Just one more, mamma," coaxed the little miss. "Well, child, what la ltr -"Who baa the flat above usf" ' A Bey's Idea. Willie was looking at tho pictures In a magaalno when suddenly ' ho turned to hla father and- asked: "Pa, do cocoanuta really grow on trees T" "Of course! Where did you think they grewT" "Why, pa; I always , thought tbe monkeys laid 'em." , In Harmony. "They tell mo tho people next door to you are strictly correct in their conduct" "They jrlde themselves on having nothing but virtuous surroundings. Their very piano la upright" "The Conditions, "is the race always to the swlftf "Tea, If they don't puncture tbotr Urea." FOE OF EFFICIENCY IN NAVY Commandsr-ln-Chltf of British Atlan- tlo 'last Deolares Alcohol Detriment to Men. The following clear and striking de claration by Sir J. R. Jelllcoe. com mander-in-chief of tbe British Atlantic fleet, shows how the most responsible officers of tho navy regard alcohol aa the great foe of efficiency among men of tbe service: ' "Any officer holding command which carries with It any measure of responsibility for tbe defence of tbe empire must recognise, aa I do, tho value of temperance In promoting fighting efficiency. In tbe navy there are three qualities upon 1 which effi ciency mainly depends. They are dis cipline,' straight shooting, and endur ance, and temperance unquestionably tends greatly to the promotion of these qualities. In regard to discipline, one has only to look at the punishment re turns to realize how many of the dis ciplinary offences are due at the out set to intemperance. As for endurance, medical research haa amply proved the fact that temperance la a great as set in Improving physical qualities, and, therefore, tbe endurance of tbe human race. But of our own personal experience wo know that we do not drink alcohol Just before a football match or a boat race. If we do wo ahall fall, and the aame Is true of any other pursuit Involving endurance. As regards straight shooting, which Is so largely a queatlon of eye, it Is every one's experience that abstinence Is necessary for the highest efficiency. If one were going to a rifle meeting in the afternoon. It wouldn't do to drink a whisky and soda at lunch. If I should do that I know I should bavo no chance of making a "possible." What applies to a rifle applies equally to a heavy gun, and all admirals rec ognize this by taking care that the fleet la called away from a harbor on urgent business at least twenty-four hours before battle practice or a gun layers' test is commenced. "Most captains also, If their ships are to Are at these practices In the afternoon," continued Admiral Jelll coe, "hold over the grog issue until the evening. In this connection I should like to refer to the experience of Capt. Ogllvy, who, I regret to aay, died some eighteen months ago. Ho was the officer who did such good service with naval guns at the relief of Ladysmlth. Commencing under Sir Percy Scott ifl the Terrible, he later commanded the Grafton, a gunnery school tender, and then the Revenge, the Instructional battle practice ship, and died when In command of tho Natal, which ship he placed at the top of the fleet In gunlayers' test Hv went carefully Into statistics, - and found that the shooting efficiency of men was 30 per cent beter before than after the grog Issue. He put his figures In the form of a curve, and It behooves an admiral when chasing an enemy's fleet , and manoeuvring for position to consider the grog curve as well as the position of the sun and direction of the wind. These facts will show, I think, that naval officers are fully alive to the advantage of temperance In promoting fighting effi ciency." LIQUOR BLAMED FOR MURDER Pittsburg Minister Lays Insanity, Dl- vorce and Untimely Deaths to the Alcohol Habit Rev. Dr. John N. Underwood of Pittsburg addressed a temperance rally tbe other night, held In connection with the Columbia Union conference of Seventh Day Adventists. Other speakers were Prof. O. S. Wilkinson. Washington, D. C; Dr.'H. C. Henkel, returned missionary' from India, and Evangelist P. C. Gilbert of Concord, Concerning the evils of alcohol. Rev. Mr. Underwood declared: "That 3,600 wives are killed every year with revolvers, hatchets, knives. clubs and other weapons. "That 2,600 babies are murdered by drunken fathers who fall Into bed and crush their lives out ' 'That 80 out of every 100 divorces are caused by liquor. 'That 180,000 men and women go insane every year. , "That It coat tho country 121,829.128 annually to care for the Insane from drink, and $37,642,730 to prosecute those who have become criminals from the same cause." . : : Rev. Mr. Underwood stated that a procession 72 miles long marched into their graves every year and that among tho procession were ministers, doctors and lawyers. The ' money spent for liquor last year, he said, would make a pile of silver dollars 2.367 miles high. . -. GREATEST BREEDER Of CRIME Alcohol la Most Evldsnt and Dsngsr . ous Causa 'of Lawlassnass, 8ays Duasaldorf Expert. What la tho greatest source ' of erlinaT Is It poverty and misery? Is It nnfavorahla social conditional1 Is It harwlttary affliction T , la It dafsctlr education and training' Thosa ques tions wer presented and discussed by Doctor Points, penal hospital super intendent of Dusseldorf, In a lecture on the psychology of crime, at a meet ing of scientist In Tenbangen and af terwards published in a memoir. In It be saye that the close relation exist ing between alcoholism and all kinds of crime haa been much discussed since the alcohol question' haa re ceived ao much attention, and It la no longer seriously denied. He declared alcohol to be the most evident and moat dangerous cause of crime aa welt as of much misery and evil, and eloaea by saying that the hopeful movement against aloohot offers the pest pros pect for the prevention of crime, H? gienlscbet Ruadschao.' TWELVE YEARS Wants Other Women to Kno vi How She Was Finally , Restored to Health. Lonlirlana, Mai "I think a worn at naturally dislikes to make ber trouble! known to the public, but complete restor ation tohealth meant so much to me thai I cannot keep from telling mine for th sake of other suffer lng women. "I had been slcl bout twelve years, and bad eleven doc tors. I had drag, rimr down nalna. pains at monthly periods, bilious spells, and was getting worse all the time, j would hardly get over one spell when would be sick again. No tongue can tell what I suffered from cramps, and si times I could hardly walk. The doctors said I might die at one of those times, but I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound and got better right away. Your valuable medicine is worth mora than mountains of gold to suffering wo men." Mrs. Bertha Muff, 603 N. 4th Street, Louisiana, Mo. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and to-day holda the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials on file in tho Pinkham laboratory atLynn.Masa., seem to prove this fact If yoa want special adrlco write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl dentin!) Lynn, Mass. I oar letter will bo opened, read and answered by a woman and held la strict confidence. Indigestion causes heartburn, sour stomach, nervousness, nausea, impure blood, and more trouble than many different kinds of diseases. The food you. eat ferments in your stomach, and the poisons it forms are ab sorbed into your whole system, causing many dis tressing symptoms. At the first sign of indigestion, try '.62 the old, reliable, vegetable liver powder, to quickly cleanse your system from these undesirable poisons. Mrs. Riley Laramore, of Ooodwater, Mo., says: "I suffered for years from dyspep sia and heartburn. Thedford's Black-Draught, in small doses, cured my heartburn in a few days, ana now I can eat without distress." Try it Insist on Thedford's ; i , , rNKNIWrniNCHMSMf DV.Mo..So.a.Sa.a. THERAPION Hp!n.Ee.T,i: tU(T SUCCESS, UUIttS KIDNKV. RI.A1IUKR IIIHK1HE8, PILLS. CHRONIC ULCSH8, SKIN KRITPTION8 KITHKRHRX Sw ftSdraM or.loi lm RKR bonkM w PR. LB CI.KRO kM0. CO. SAVSRaTOCJC RIK. UAHfSTRAD. LONDON. SNO. IS Opium, WbUkey and Untg Habits truat nd at hum or at Sanitarium. Book on nbifvt iTrwsv fn. it. M.WOOIJ.KV. tW f ICTUB sUHlTisUCM, ATLAXTA, MHGIA npnnev trbUTHo. oivaqniekra. vnur I UUsilj mwn smi ling and short braaVh in a few days and snUra lallef In 1H4 dars, trial traaimwl FBJCK. 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We sell sup plies for all makes. Ours Is the beat equipped repair department In the South. Deal with us and srre money. J, E CRAYTON CO ,, Charlotte. N. O. f"7r"! fl w make specialty -J of Return Tubular E G 1 11 E S "oilers and Englnee, Tanke and Towers. , K..J " " V They are particularly H fi 1 1 C D sdaptedforSaw Mills, li U I Is L li 0 ou uuj Cotton Gin ning. We also handle Bsw Mills and Gasoline Engines. If you are contem plating, the. purchase of new power plant either steam or gasoline. It will pay you to write us. - J. S. SCHCFIELD'S CS CD., Kscsa. Ba. Iras imsst rT W TH. St, Cinrlct, R. C,
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 24, 1912, edition 1
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